CoDeFi Workshop Stanford 2020

Workshop on Coordination of Decentralized Finance (CoDeFi)

- Exploring Financial Stability Impacts of Decentralized Networks -

In association with Stanford Blockchain Conference 2020

Date and Venue

Agenda (subject to change)

  • 10:00 - 10:15 am: Shin’ichiro Matsuo (Program Chair): Opening Remarks
  • 10:15 - 10:45 am: Ryosuke Ushida: Regulatory Pain Points and Multi-stakeholder Approach
  • 10:45 - 11:15 am: Tarun Chitra: Stress Testing Decentralized Financial Services
  • 11:15 - 12:00 pm: Unconference discussion (& coffee break)
  • 12:00 - 01:00 pm: Lunch
  • 01:00 - 01:30 pm: Byron Gibson: Overview of Risk in Decentralized Financial Systems
  • 01:30 - 02:30 pm: Unconference discussions
  • 02:30 - 03:00 pm: coffee break
  • 03:00 - 03:30 pm: Bram Cohen: Consensus Protocol Risks
  • 03:30 - 04:30 pm: Unconference discussions
  • 04:30 - 05:00 pm: Conclusion & Wrap up

Background

On June 8th and 9th 2019, Distributed Ledger Technology-related innovations have been referenced in the Communique at the G20 Finance and Central Bank Meeting in Fukuoka, Japan, referencing the report produced by the Financial Stability Board (FSB) - https://fsb.org/about

Blockchain Multi-Stakeholder CoDeFi Workshop

This workshop is designed to provide multi-stakeholders an environment for the understanding, exploration and discussion of the Coordination of Decentralized Finance (CoDeFi). As permissionless blockchain and distributed ledger technology (DLT) platforms evolve and mature, there is a need for multi-stakeholders to engage in their planning, development, roll-out, and operation, in order for innovation of a wide variety of financial applications to proliferate and become mainstream. Thus far it has been mainly developer & startup communities which are driving these protocols, platforms, and applications for this new era of computing. New standards, governance mechanisms and design patterns are evolving and need input from a variety of perspectives. There is a growing trend towards decentralized computing systems in which distributed ledger technologies are a fundamental component. These systems are designed to be global computing systems; they will likely form the basis of new financial services and businesses including a distributed Financial Market Infrastructure (dFMI). These new financial services and businesses could bring huge benefits to the global financial system. However financial regulators, central banks, the BIS and IMF, while recognizing the potential of DLT systems, have also been keenly aware of the challenges in the adoption, and designing for the consumer protections required to balance usability, safety while supporting innovation. While it is likely that many G20 countries will be leading the design and development of these new infrastructures, all countries should be considered and encouraged to participate in the planning.

Basic Structure of the Workshop

  • Lecture about background of multi-stakeholder discussions for Decentralized Finance
  • Selected talks from all stakeholders
  • Unconference style multi-stakeholder discussions on selected discussion topics

Unconference discussion topic areas:

  • Nature of systemic risk in decentralized systems
  • 2020 Scaling cryptocurrency and regulatory challenges
  • Common understandings on “Regulatory Goals”
  • Risk and resilience in cryptocurrency financial systems
  • Financial stability impacts of decentralized risk-taking, decision-making & record-keeping
  • Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs)
  • Interoperability with existing financial infrastructure, permissionless ledgers & CBDCs
  • Standards: technical, regulatory
  • Governance of protocols, implementations
  • Security, standards, and regulation of cryptocurrency exchanges
  • FATF: AML and privacy
  • Synthetic Hegemonic Currencies (SHC)
  • Corporate Coins & Consortiums: Libra Coin & Association, Binance Venus, Walmart, etc.
  • Mainstream adoption of cryptocurrencies & blockchain technologies

Organizing and Program Committees

(Alphabetical Order)

  • Byron Gibson, Program Manager at Stanford Center for Blockchain Research
  • Shin’ichiro Matsuo, Georgetown University and BSafe.network (Workshop Chair)
  • Robert Schwentker, DLT Education and BSafe.network
  • Shigeya Suzuki, Keio University, BSafe.Network, BASE Alliance and WIDE Project
  • Yuta Takanashi, JFSA and ex-Georgetown University
  • Ryosuke Ushida, JFSA and Georgetown University
  • Pindar Wong, BSafe.network